Sriracha hot sauce lovers sighed with relief—although it could have just been gastroesophageal reflux —when a judge Thursday denied the city of Irwindales’s request to shut down a chiles-fueled factory over complaints of noxious neighborhood gases.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Robert O’Brien denied a request for a temporary restraining order that would have shut down the factory owned by Huy Fong Foods until complaints by residents were addressed. The city filed its request after residents said they suffered headaches, burning eyes and sore throats.

Around 30 residents have complained to the city, although reporters talked to some neighbors who didn’t detect any smell. Ruby Sanchez was not one of them. She told the Associated Press, “It's like having a plate of chili peppers shoved right in your face.”

The 2-year-old, 650,000-square-foot factory was built with the help of city redevelopment funds and processes 100 million pounds of peppers a year in producing the company’s wildly popular hot sauce and two other Asian food sauces. Around 40 trucks a day drop off millions of jalapeno peppers that are crushed and mixed with other spices along a conveyer belt.

The company installed filters at the plant after initial complaints that the smell of peppers and garlic were bothering neighbors. When that failed to relieve residents, the city suggested that a $600,000 advanced filtration system be added, but the company balked.

Upon news of the possible factory shutdown, the media warned of price hikes and advised fans on how to survive without the condiment. The Atlantic, its spicy tongue firmly pressed against its blistered cheek, warned of a black market forming and suggested that “hoarding and selling bottles wouldn’t be a bad idea.” The AP described Sriracha as “so fiercely hot it makes Tabasco and Picante seem mild, though to those with fireproof palates and iron stomachs it is strangely addicting.”

The company argued in court that shutting it down now would be a hardship because the plant is at the end of its harvesting and processing cycle, which lasts about three months out of the year. A lawyer for the company also argued that shutting the factory down now would prevent the South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD) from finishing an ongoing assessment of the plant’s filtration system, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The city reportedly has a preliminary injunction request pending that is scheduled to get a hearing on November 22, and, if that fails, has also filed for a permanent injunction.